No - the child must recieve one allele from each parent. This means that because one parent is AB they must donate an A or a B to the child.
In order for the child to be O both parents must have at least one O (AO, BO or OO).
The other parent would have to have blood type O to have a child with that blood type.
If the parent's blood type is AB and B, the possible blood type of the baby is A, B, or AB.
the child takes the A gene from one parent and B from the other. And the both of parent are supposed to be AB blood type, or one A blood type and the other B.
No.
No. In order for someone to have AB blood, they must inherit the A from one parent and the B from the other. Therefore a parent with O blood could only have A, B or O children (depending on the blood type of the other parent).
yes, that is exactly what AB blood is and that is how blood type is inherited. Nice work
A man with any blood type by AB can father a child with type O blood. A parent heterozygous for type A or B may have a child with type O.
No. Neither parent can be AB blood type. Each parent must have at least one resessive gene for O blood type. Either parent could be type A or B or O.
Either A or B; AB and O are impossible.
A B+ parent can have a child with A+ blood. The other parent must be type A or type AB for this to occur.
The child can have the same blood type. It is possible if the child obtains the allele IA from one parent and IB from the other. So if a person with blood type AB provides IA or IB and the other parent provides the other allele, then the child may have the same blood type i.e. AB positive.
No, a child cannot have blood type O if one parent is blood type AB and the other parent is blood type A. Blood type O is inherited when both parents contribute an O allele, which is not present in this case.